Fleeing Nazi Germany: Five Historians Migrate to America
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About this ebook
Historian Allan Mitchell knew five notable scholars of history who escaped, and he recounts in vivid detail their early careers and their successes as historians of Europe. He provides biographies of the following:
Felix Gilbert, who taught at Bryn Mawr College and Princetons Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton
Klemens von Klemperer, who studied at Harvard University, served in the US Army during World War II, and joined the faculty at Smith College
Werner Tom Angress, who battled an identity crisis before journeying to America and earned a purple heart and bronze star during World War II, later going on to teach at the State University of New York in Stony Brook
Peter Gay, who taught at Columbia and Yale universities and became a prolific author, writing dozens of books
Fritz Stern, who also taught at Columbia University and became a renowned author
Discover the contributions these five men made as historians and the personal obstacles they overcame to find a better life in the United States in Fleeing Nazi Germany.
Michael Morgan
Michael Morgan is seminary musician for Columbia Theological Seminary and organist at Central Presbyterian Church in Atlanta. He is also a Psalm scholar and owns one of the largest collections of English Bibles in the country.
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Fleeing Nazi Germany - Michael Morgan
Table of Contents
PREFACE
Chapter One
Felix Gilbert
Chapter Two
Klemens von Klemperer
Chapter Three
Werner T. Angress
Chapter Four
Peter Gay
Chapter Five
Fritz Stern
Chapter Six
Five Who Fled
Endnotes
Suggested Further Secondary Reading
PREFACE
The autobiographical form is fraught with pitfalls. Unavoidably, when attempting to summarize one’s own life, there is a tendency by authors either to suppress certain compromising details or to exaggerate the significance of those presented. The very nature of the enterprise necessarily precludes any claim to objectivity. By definition, then, the end product can only be personal and, to a greater or lesser degree, narcissistic. Hence it is unsurprising to find in memoirs several or all of the same characteristics: self-congratulation, name-dropping, all too frequent references to my friend
so-and-so, inflated claims of prescience, sententious lessons from some fortuitous twist of fate, unduly elaborate efforts to integrate particular experience with general history, and so on. Yet arguably these recurrent traits of most autobiographical writing should be accepted and indeed relished by readers, since they lend such accounts their individual flavor.
This study is based largely on five published autobiographies that share a common set of themes. All were composed by persons who were born in Germany before 1933, who left their native land during the opening years of the Nazi regime, and who subsequently established outstanding academic careers in the United States as historians of Europe. Admittedly, this is but a tiny sample of the thousands of European intellectuals who fled from fascism to America, but there is surely value in examining carefully the various cases of the scholars who have been chosen to represent the rest.
In general, this remarkable tale of migration in the 1930s is a topic already well explored. It is conspicuous, however, that the best broad-gauged survey of the subject by H. Stuart Hughes includes no category for historians and makes no mention of the five names that primarily figure here.1 Even the extensive compendium of refugee historians published by Catherine Epstein confines itself to what she calls the first generation,
that is, those persons who had already completed their academic training in Germany and who thus arrived in America as adults.2 A survey of the second generation, those who came to the United States as children or teenagers, has been compiled by the Swiss researcher Heinz Wolf, but it was released long before the most recent wave of relevant memoirs appeared at the turn of the twenty-first century.3 Five of these latecomers are to be considered in the pages following. Only one of them, Felix Gilbert, has been selected to stand in for the first generation; the others, whose autobiographies have more recently been issued in print, properly belong to the second. Their stories deserve our attention as well.
While exposing the criteria for concentrating on these five, in the interest of full disclosure, a personal word at the outset is appropriate. As it happened, I came to know each of them, more or less well, in the course of my own career. Two were only incidental acquaintances: Felix Gilbert, who was a visiting lecturer at Harvard during my graduate studies there; and Peter Gay, whom I first met at Yale and who later visited me at UC San Diego as keynote speaker at a colloquium I had organized for the retirement of my senior colleague Stuart Hughes. Two were close friends: Klemens von Klemperer, my long-time neighbor and faculty colleague at Smith College; and Werner (Tom
) Angress, with whom I often exchanged family outings on Long Island and in Berlin. Fritz Stern fell somewhere between on this scale of familiarity as an individual with whom I shared intellectual pursuits in New York and Germany. I may append the observation, which should become evident, that these various friendships did not entirely dull my critical spirit and that it is far from my intention to indulge here in hagiography. Rather, as an American, I have attempted to draw fair portraits of these five refugee scholars and, in the concluding chapter, to derive apt generalizations, comparisons, and contrasts.
One final prefatory remark is essential. The historians under discussion are introduced according to their age, starting with the eldest, Felix Gilbert, born before 1914, and ending with the youngest, Fritz Stern, who was barely six years old when Adolf Hitler became the German chancellor in January 1933. The other three experienced the advent and expansion of Nazism as children maturing into their teens. All were thoroughly German as youngsters, and all later became perfectly fluent in their adopted English language during the later American phase of their lives. Yet a word of caution is required in specific reference to their Jewishness, a subject to which we must return. To speak flatly of five Jews
in this instance would be to adopt the Nazi blanket definition of that term and to deny the individuality on which every autobiographer has a right to insist.
As always, a few friends deserve my inadequate expression of gratitude for helping me to prepare the manuscript: Stanley Chodorow, Peter Hennock, Larry Joseph, Annemarie Kleinert, Mili Rapp, and Tom Skidmore.
Chapter One
Felix Gilbert
Born in 1905 at Baden Baden, where his father was a physician and director of a tuberculosis sanatorium, Felix Gilbert was perfectly representative of the elder generation of German-bred scholars who experienced the Nazi regime after 1933 as young adults and who left their native land to pursue a professional career in the United States. His father was the son of a British officer – hence the name Gilbert – who married a woman from the Rhineland and then settled with her in Germany, where Felix’s father grew up and gained his medical training. Tragically, the latter died prematurely a few months after the birth of his son, and the young widow Gilbert moved soon thereafter to Berlin. As an adult Felix Gilbert liked to claim that he hailed from Baden, but the truth was that he always spoke German with a distinct Berlin accent.4
The extensive family of Gilbert’s mother is far more difficult to untangle. Its deep historical roots stretched back to the Enlightenment philosopher Moses Mendelssohn and to the much celebrated composer of the early nineteenth century Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy. Another branch bore the name of Oppenheim, a distinguished wealthy Jewish banking dynasty in Berlin. In addition, one must take account of a Prussian army officer, a professor of medicine at the University of Berlin, and a grandfather who founded the prosperous chemical and photo firm of AGFA, which eventually became a major element of the giant industrial conglomerate I. G. Farben. Ever discreet, Gilbert makes no mention in his memoirs of the awful irony that I. G. Farben produced much of the toxic gas used by the Nazis in their extermination camps.5
This cursory review is sufficient to establish that Felix Gilbert was the scion of a cosmopolitan and quite well-to-do clan that securely occupied a privileged rank in Berlin’s upper bourgeoisie, a social class that was coming to prominence and political clout in the wake of national unification in 1870. Gilbert’s boyhood thus coincided with the glory days of the German Kaiserreich and, though he never uses the term, he was unmistakably an offspring of the Belle Époque. That term is all the more appropriate since the combination of money and education meant among other things that the command of foreign languages was taken for granted in the family. Gilbert had an English governess (who left just before the outbreak of war in 1914), and he was exposed to regular French lessons, a tongue spoken fluently by his mother. Another family trait is worth emphasizing. Although everyone was fully aware of their Jewish background, the Mendelssohns had converted to Lutheranism in the early nineteenth century. Moreover, because of frequent intermarriages with Christians, the religious identity of the family